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University of Michigan Museum of Natural History

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University of Michigan Museum of Natural History
The museum's signature mastodon skeletons, on display in the main atrium
Former name
Exhibit Museum
LocationAnn Arbor, Michigan, US
TypeNatural history museum
Websitelsa.umich.edu/ummnh Edit this at Wikidata

The University of Michigan Museum of Natural History (UMMNH) is a natural history museum of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States. The university's natural history collections date to 1837, and have been on display since 1881. The current museum was founded in 1956, and is operated by the university's College of Literature, Science, and the Arts.

The university's natural history collection was housed in the Alexander G. Ruthven Museums Building from 1928 to 2017, when preparations began to move the museum to the new the Biological Sciences Building on the university's Central Campus. The museum has over 45,000 square feet of exhibit space, and offers free admission to the general public.[1]

History

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Alexander G. Ruthven Museums Building
View of the building, looking east, 1928. The street to the left is now a pedestrian pathway.
ArchitectAlbert Kahn
Part ofUniversity of Michigan Central Campus Historic District (ID78001514)
Designated CPJune 15, 1978

The university's natural history collections began in 1837, and the first formal museum for their exhibit was established in 1881. In 1925, the state legislature appropriated $900,000 (equivalent to $12,500,000 in 2023) for the construction of a new museum building, which would house researchers' offices and public exhibits. The new University Museums Buildling was completed in 1928, and housed musuems of anthropology, paleontology and zoology, and a herbarium. The first public exhibits in the new building opened in the winter of 1929.[1][2]

Front entrance of the Ruthven Building in 1940, with the newly-installed pumas

The University Museums Building was built with two pedestals at its main entrance for sculptures, but none were installed at the time of its construction. In 1940, two sculptures of pumas, designed by Carleton W. Angell and cast in terrazzo, were created. The pumas were cast by the Detroit unit of the Works Progress Administration to Angell's design, and installation was complete by August 1940.[3] The building was renamed after Alexander G. Ruthven, director of the museum and later president of the university.[4]

The public exhibit museum was founded in 1956, following a reorganization of the university's science departments. A planetarium was added in 1959,[2] and the building was expanded in 1964.[4]

The museum closed to the public in 2017 to move its collection to the new Biological Sciences Building, constructed adjacent to the Ruthven building on the university's Central Campus. The new building includes classrooms, researchers' offices, and the museum's exhibit spaces. The relocated museum reopened in 2019.[1]

The museum is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt non-profit organization. In 2019, it employed 23 full-time staff and over 50 paid student docents.[1]

Exhibits

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The museum has four major permanent exhibits:

Two galleries display exhibits on "Evolution & Health" and archaeological research work in the U-M Museum of Archaeological Anthropology. The first floor Rotunda Lobby currently displays "The Invisible World of Mites".

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d Hodges, Michael H. (April 12, 2019). "UM Museum of Natural History shines in new home". The Detroit News.
  2. ^ a b "History". University of Michigan Museum of Natural History. Retrieved April 10, 2015.
  3. ^ Angell, Carleton W. (August 17, 1940). ""Two Black Lions" Now Guard Entrance". The Michigan Alumnus. 46 (25): 543–544. Retrieved January 8, 2025.
  4. ^ a b Sommers, Laurie K. (1977). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination Form: University of Michigan Central Campus Historic District". Retrieved January 8, 2025.
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